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Thursday, July 9, 2026

What I'm Reading: Even More Booklist Reviews including Clay McLeod Chapman

I have had a HUGE backlog of reviews in the queue for Booklist. I was writing 2 a week for a while there in April and May. Some got pushed further out and others moved to online only. And still others (sorry Clay) in my brain I posted here on the blog but in reality, I did not post them. 

So I am rectifying that here today and giving the lost posts that appeared in Booklist's June issue from the print and an online exclusive. And thankfully, my list of written but unpublished reviews is now much more manageable.

I also have room for this today because while my July Horror Preview is in the July 2026 print issue of Library Journal, it will not go online until 7/15 which means I cannot post it here on the blog until 7/16 (the 15th is always LibraryReads day)

So today even more glowing reviews of upcoming Fall Horror titles beginning with one that will be a huge hit this Fall

Book cover for Devil Inside by Clay McLeod Chapman. Click on the image for details.
Devil Inside
by Clay McLeod Chapman 
Aug. 2026. 384p. MIRA, paper, $18.99  (9780778306214)
First published June 1, 2026 (Booklist).

Swoon and screams abound in Chapman’s, perfectly titled, Horroromance. It’s 2002 and Jordan is loving his life as a bike messenger in Richmond. But when the book opens, readers are taken on the ride when a rushed delivery leads to a crash that leaves Jordan dead for 2.5 minutes before being revived. Now, one year later, Jordan is out with friends for the first time since the accident when he meets Lilith and they share one night of intense passion. Finding her again, however, proves difficult, because Lilith is a demon who skips from body to body, burrowing into humans through their darkest thoughts. Lilith tasted something special in Jordan, something she cannot quit, and she may not be the only one who wants him. Told from both Jordan and Lilith's perspective, this macabre but sweet (and spicy) love story explores consent from an original angle, contemplates how love is a type of possession, and opens readers up to the existentially terrifying idea of the demons among us. While horror takes the lead here, both unfold as superb examples of their genres on the page, reliably hitting all the beats fans of each demand. For readers who were captivated by Spread Me by Gailey or My Sister the Serial Killer by Braithwaite and fans of the obsessive love portrayed in Eric LaRocca’s horror. 

Three Words The Describe This Book: Horroromance, existentially terrifying, possession/obsession 


Further Appeal: Love is messy— literally. But it is. 


Horror first, romance second. Both excellent. But romance fans, beware, this is Horror with a very good romance. The only thing keeping this from 5 stars is that there were some details that were either missing or introduced and then not returned to. But that is a minor quibble. This is a VERY fun read and a great example of how the Horroromance genre could be a thing. It is NOT paranormal romance (which many are and that is romance first).


Let's explore that more. Both are genres that appeal to the emotions. Neither works if you cannot feel the fear and the love. Check on both. The terror is full body. It begins uneasy and tricks you into thinking is is going to be quirky only, but NO, this is full out existential terror by the end. Jordan was dead for 2.5 mins after his accident. We know this from the start. But he came back. And that allows him to be able to see the demons in our midst. 


Intersting….okay but then as the romance heats up so does the information behind Jordan’s place in this world. We see into more of the demons and their power and what it means about human nature, and more. Existential terror.


But also, the romance. It is a satisfying romance, it honors the story beats that are required while introducing it’s own unique characters and frame. We get both sides of the romances parties POV. Jordan as he deals with healing reentering the able bodied world— one that is changing quickly as he was a bike messenger in 2002 and now it is 2003 and phones and the internet are expanding and bike messengers are going the way of dinosaurs. That was also a nice touch for frame and to increase unease. 


When Jordan meet Lilith, she was perfect for him. But as we know from the start— Lilith is a demon. Not human and she has her own relationship scars— just different kind of relationship— she committed to a body that kept her trapped for years (read you will see). We follow Lilith as she jumps from body to body as people touch each other— tasting their souls and comparing them to wines (nice touch) . We watch her deal with her issues and see how the two compromise to have the love relationships that works best for them. There are bumps but they are very believable even considering the fast that she is a demon.


That was vague but I don’t want to give away the chills and love. The Swoons and Screams-- I will work that into the review. Also the title is great— literal yes, but then it surprises you how deep it goes. Their happily ever after is also there but it a horror one too.


I loved a few themes, plot points here. First, love is a kind of obsession or is it a possession. The possession stuff in general was used to perfection in the romance parts here. Dubious consent was an obvious one-- If Lilith is possessing the bodies Jordan is having sex with-- is that consent. Chapman explores this through the narrative and it was well done. But also, Jordan is so obsessed with Lilith and she with him that it feels like possession. Chapman explores this through a ramping up of the horror angles here. But also when you are in love-- it becomes an obsession. That line is very thin. 


Another theme-- the darkness inside all humans. Even if it is small. But often it is not. It is hidden, and demons exploit it to possess people.


The idea that demons are out there possessing people all the time even if for a moment. Terrifying and felt with your whole body as a reader.


Further Readalikes:  The best readalike is Spread Me by Gailey. If you liked that you will like this. My Sister the Serial Killer fans would love this as well. After you read this one, you will see it too. Hellbound Heart by Barker is another good option. Thing Have Gotten Worse Since we Last Spoke by LaRocca is the vibes here as well.


Horroromace is about to explode and this will be the title that sets the high water mark for the genre for the near future. 


And finally, the online only review which went live in June.


Book cover for Witches of the Wheel by Lindsay Terbium. Click on the image for more details.

Witches of the Wheel

By Lindsay Merbaum

Sept. 2026. 264p. Creature, paper, $18.95  (9781951971540); e-book (9781951971557)First published June 8, 2026 (Booklist Online).


Dark feminist fantasy, witches, and an ancient goddess collide at the (literal) underground lesbian bar, The Wheel. Raised by a neglectful mother, Gold spent many hours alone, hours during which she realized she could see and talk to ghosts. One in particular, a strong, battle-clad woman, was clearly older and stronger than the others. When Gold’s mother dies suddenly, 17 year-old she finds shelter, a job, and friendship at The Wheel. Gold enters by making the sacrifice the bar’s old magic demands and begins working as a barback, immersing herself in the bar’s ancient history, the dark and serious power it holds over employees and visitors alike, and longing to learn more about the coven of witches who meet there. Gold is not perfect, but her conversational narration and honesty will draw readers in quickly, as they root for her to find her place, embrace her magic, and claim the destiny she wants for herself. A perfect choice for readers who like Cackle by Harrison, Queen of Teeth by Piper, and Goddess of Filth by Castro. 

Three Words That Describe This Book: conversational storytelling, atmospheric, lesbians/goddesses/ witches (I know that last one is three words but they go together)


Further Appeal: Other words, immersive, strong sense of place, coming of age, single pov, compelling (but not fast), dark fantasy
 
Gold had a tough childhood, her mother was borderline abusive, but once her mother realized that Gold had the power to talk to the dead, she used her daughter to make money. But even before her mom monetizes her powers, Gold knew one of the spirits that visited her was older and stronger than the more common ghosts. 

After her mom dies suddenly while Gold is still a teenager, she finds shelter, friendship, and a purpose at The Wheel, a lesbian bar, hidden underground, and guarded by an old magic.

Taken in a taught the ways of The Wheel, readers join Gold as she takes it all in. Learns about the ancient history of the bar, the dark and serious power it holds over those in charge, and the coven who meet there weekly. Gold yearns to be accepted. She is wearing for a place to belong, a family to be a part of, but she also holds more power than anyone realizes. And her connection to an ancient goddess has the potential to put everything her new friends hold dear at risk. But also, it could save them all.
Gold is forced to make tough choices as she embraces her magic, her connection to the ancient goddess who has been visiting her since she was a child, shakes of her trauma and decides how she is going to live her adult life. She’s not perfect, but readers will root for Gold.


With the conversational storytelling narration from Gold, readers will be immersed in the world and encouraged to sit back and take it all in. 

Dark fantasy, queer, witchy  feminist vibes, ancient evil, and coming of age story collide in a place (The Wheel) that readers will not soon forget, and wish they could actually visit. 


Readalikes: I really feel like the three books above if considered together, they capture what you can expect here. You like all three you will enjoy this book.

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

What I'm Reading: The July 2026 Issue of Booklist-- Second Set of Three Reviews

I have 6 reviews debuting in Booklist this month. Three are starred, tand hree more are glowing reviews in the magazine itself.

I am breaking up the reviews into 2 posts. Yesterday, I featured the three starred reviews. Today I have the 3 remaining reviews in alphabetical order by author. As usual, I will include my draft review with bonus appeal and readalike content.

Book cover for Blacktail by Scott Hawkins. Click on the image for more details.

Blacktail

Scott Hawkins

Sept. 2026. 272p. Crown, $29  (9798217089963)

First published July 2026 (Booklist).


Ten years after the publication of The Library of Mount Char, Hawkins is back with another original and riveting, horror-fantasy hybrid, but this time, featuring animal narrators. After Blacktail, a young wolf, watches humans destroy everything he holds dear, word of his strength, anger, and blood-thirsty actions reach Old Kitty Mother, a feline witch whose power and influence extend around the world. She channels Blacktail's unique gifts, sending him on a quest to reconnect the animal world with their Forest God, who has forsaken them. This is eco-horror at its most primal and visceral. The various animal narrators make it very clear not only how horrible humans are, but also show how far they are all willing to go to get their revenge. Hawkins pulls no punches, and at times, Blacktail's violent choices are intensely discomfiting. However, this is also a mythical journey following a flawed but sympathetic loner hero who meets new creatures along his way, hears their stories, before moving on toward his destiny. Fans of Adam’s Watership Down who can handle the blood thirsty vengeance in Malerman’s Pearl will devour this one.

Three Words That Describe This Book: animal point of view, dark fantasy quest/journey, nature is not happy with us


Further Appeal: First things first, this is not The Library at Mount Char, it is very different but it is also very good. It is lyrical and fairytale/mystical. But it is also practical in many ways.

Blacktail a wolf who is out for revenge against all humans is the main narrator. He is not the only narrator, but he is the main one. No humans get the pov, only animals.

This book makes us humans look VERY bad. All of us. And Hawkins meters out judgement and punishment on all humans through Blacktail and there is no mercy. None. I cannot stress this enough. Even humans who we readers think don't deserve to die, will be brutally hunted by Blacktail. Animals are hunted too, but it all makes sense through Blacktail's world view-- which is very clear to readers.

To see him react to seeing "car" kill animals and leave them on the pavement -- killing just for fun and not a reasons. To see the way he looks at houses, people's impact on the land. His reaction to pets who he calls slaves. How the animal work interacts and communicates and the sprits and witches that bind them all. It is riveting and original.

I also loved that Hawkins uses Blacktail's journey to break the story into vignettes. Each of his stops/passing theough a new territory, gives readers the chance to meet new animal characters. The rhythm of this keeps the story moving a a good pace.

There is one "good human" here and kudos to Hawkins for sticking with the POV and Blacktail's sense of right and wrong because wow is it uncomfortable for the human reader. 

Seething with rage and seeking vengeance -- appetite for revenge not satiated, only growing. This is a violent, in your face revenge novel. 

The storytelling has a mystical/dark fairy tale feel.

Further Readalikes: The two above capture this story well, but I also thought about Lord of the Rings as well. Frodo's quest seems impossible but it is dire and many will help or hurt him along the way. 


And I do think that Daniel Mason’s North Woods is a good comp. The vignette nature of the story and its riveting storytelling that is compelling even though you wouldn’t call it fast. This was a similar reading experience, but WAY MORE BLOOD here though. 

Next up is...

Book cover of Incarnate by Alma Katsu. Click on the image for more info.
Incarnate 
By Alma Katsu

Sept. 2026. 288p. Putnam, $29  (9798217177707)

First published July 2026 (Booklist).

Katsu (Fiend) returns with a modern retelling of The Picture of Dorian Gray that hits very close to home. Dorothy lands her dream job with an AI meets motion capture effects company, but her destructive need to be popular rears its head when she illegally accesses their servers to create the gorgeous influencer, Isabella, passing her off as a real person. Her work gets a few likes before attracting the attention of someone offering to make all of her dreams come true, for an unnamed price. Dorothy agrees and her life changes overnight, as her world quickly goes to unimaginable heights before spiraling out of control leading to horrors that pile upon horrors. Uncomfortable at every turn (including gnarly body horror), the real terror here comes when readers inevitably interrogate their own social media choices. Think the film The Substance, but with more substance. For readers who enjoy Faustian bargains like All's Well by Awad or We Sold Our Souls by Hendrix as well as the AI implications explored by Tingle in Bury Your Gays.

Three Words That Describe This Book: retelling, squirm inducing, deal with the devil

Further Appeal:  The marketing on this one is correct. This is a retelling of the Picture of Dorian Gray by Wilde but for this exact moment. This was VERY well done. I can imagine how this book will make you feel (really uncomfortable because you see yourself in it and also terrified) is how Wilde's book made people feel at its time.

This book is so uncomfortable to read for so many reasons. Dorothy (our MC and narrator) is clearly making the wrong choices. We know from the prologue that she has some evil tendencies, but OH MY GOD does she make bad choices. And then we watch her continue to make bad choices, they are spiraling, and yet, as readers, we cannot look away. We fell her joy as she gets more and more followers. We know that there is a supernatural force behind it all though. This is revealed at the beginning of her journey to create the perfect influencer-- Isabella. She has to agree to some force that clearly has access to everything she is doing, even her thoughts-- she has to agree that she will pay a further price to have all the glory.

As Dorothy goes deeper and deeper into her deep fake of Isabella, things get bad. Yes she makes bad choices and chooses to lie cheat and steal to get the technology she needs. Yes she throws away an amazing opportunity to be not he ground floor of a VR company. Yes she compromises all of her relationships-- work, friends, family. Yes she makes a faustian deal with an unknown but powerful demon. All of these choices make the reader squirm with discomfort. But then, about halfway through-- after you are invested in Dorothy (you know she is not someone you should trust and like, but also you can't stop watching her, which is discomfiting on its own) Katsu take everything up an other notch. I will not give it away because WOW it is gross and fascinating, but it is also what takes the story from a scary cautionary retelling to a wholly original and stand alone horror novel for our times. And written by someone who was a national security analyst looking at the horror and harm social media could cause back in the days before anyone else was looking at it.


This book move quickly and yet it does not feel rushed. I kept turning the pages and was hooked. Then I looked up and I was like, wait...75 pages just went by when I blinked. 

There is body horror here -- VERY EFFECTIVELY USED body horror. Think the movie The Substance. But full disclosure, unlike the movie, this book has a satisfying ending that closes the loop of the story here and leave the horror itself open ended. And in fact, the last lines of this book are chilling and a little too real. So well done there. 

Further Readalikes: As I said above this is for readers who like faustian bargains. People who enjoyed Bury Your Gays by Tingle will also like this one-- the way it seriously tackles the horror of AI while still being a satisfying horror novel. And for influencer horror try youthjuice by Sathue.


Book cover of Picture of You by Josh Malerman. Click on the image for more info.

Pictures of You
By Josh Malerman
Sept. 2026. 288p. Del Rey, $28  (9780593723159)
First published July 2026 (Booklist).
The immense power the artist holds, creating pieces that make people experience very real feelings (good, bad, or ugly) is explored in horrific fashion by bestselling author Malerman. Emily and Jack are celebrating their six month anniversary with a trip to a small vacation town on Lake Michigan. After a night out, they wake up disoriented. But it is clearly more than a hangover because Emily has been trapped in a painting while Jack is alone in their hotel room, with no trace of Emily. Malerman frames this short novel, with tight writing and intense narrative control, drawing out maximum tension by shifting point of view in alternating chapters. Just as readers get important information from one character, they switch to another, squirming with discomfort, helplessly held hostage, watching as it all spirals out of control, but loving every minute of it. For readers who enjoy evil, twisted psychological suspense like Sharp Objects by Flynn and art horror that probes the potential, visceral, and destructive power of art like in Black Flame by Felker-Martin.

Three Words That Describe This book: art horror, oppressive tension, psychological suspense


Further Appeal: The set up is all you need to know, the story reveals itself from the framing (word choice is important) and the way Malerman delivers it. That is why you will want to read it.


The set up-- a couple is on vacation on Lake Michigan, after a night of drinking they both wake up "hung over" and disoriented, but maybe it is more than a hang over because Emily went from being out to waking up trapped in a painting and being held hostage by an unhinged artist and Jack woke up alone in the hotel room, with both phones and no trace of Emily.


A great set up-- you want to read it. Awesome work there. Again, the way Malerman tells it, also increases your enjoyment. 


We have multiple points of view here. Emily and Jack yes, but others are added as we go. Chapters alternate. Readers get information from one character and then we switch to another and we overlap in the time frame and get a little more. Back and forth. 


The writing is tight. The pacing perfectly controlled to draw out maximum tension. You will squirm with that tension, but in a good way. Watching this spiral out of control, knowing just a little bit more than the characters, but not nearly as much as you want. Held hostage waiting for it all to resolve, but loving every minute of the feeling.


And when the tension is released and the story is closed, Malerman leaves you with just enough unease because readers will be thinking about the power of ART to make people not just feel real feelings but act in real ways. Ways that can be positive or negative. And that is the lingering horror that will not go away.


This one will make you literally beg for the tension to end-- and yet that is a lie because you are reading it for just that reason.


Fans of Malerman will love the easter eggs to his other work here. He is very good about connecting all of his books without making it look like he is trying to. Also, people new to Malerman don't feel like they missed something either.


Further Appeal: Really any intense psychological suspense/horror, I also would suggest Sarah Pinborough in general and We Live Here Now specifically. And any art horror. Click here to access a few reddit discussions about these books.


Back tomorrow with 2 reviews from June that were almost lost in the ether of Becky's review queue.

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

What I'm Reading: The July 2026 Issue of Booklist-- The Starred Reviews (Harrison, SGJ, & LaRocca)

I have 6 reviews debuting in Booklist this month. Three are starred, three more are glowing reviews in the magazine itself, and one final one is online only.

I am breaking up the reviews into 2 posts. Today, I will feature the three starred reviews in alpha order by author's last name. As usual, I will include my draft review with bonus appeal and readalike content.

Book cover of Kiss Slay Reply by Rachel Harrison. Click on the image for more information.
STAR 
Kiss Slay Replay

By Rachel Harrison

Sept. 2026. 336p. Berkley, $30  (9798217188574)
First published July 2026 (Booklist).


Weddings can feel like horror, especially for Willa, just a few months out from cancelling her own wedding, reuniting with her college besties (and her ex), for a wedding at a former summer camp deep in the Hudson Valley. But at this wedding, the horror is all too real as a masked man goes on a murderous rampage, killing everyone, including Willa. That is, until she wakes up in her own bed to find it was all a nightmare. Or was it? The day she just dreamed of appears to be happening again. Bestseller Harrison (Play Nice) doubles down on what is expected from a time loop tale – intense unease, existential terror, deep character development, and dark humor– while also presenting original and compelling twists. Harrison puts Willa through hell; however she will need to push past her own anxiety and depression to truly find herself because the only way out is for her to find a way through. Clearly for fans of time loop stories, but don’t pigeon hole this brilliant novel because it is also a tale that actively investigates the horror genre itself much like I Was a Teenaged Slasher by Jones or Lucky Day by Tingle.

Three Words That Describe This Book: time loop, character driven, wholly original


Further Appeal: Saying wholly original about a time loop seems like an oxymoron, and here it is NOT and exactly why I have those are my three words. It is also intensely uneasy but all Time Loop novels are so I think that is implied, It is also darkly humorous, thought-provoking, and really empowering. This is Willa's story of how she is going to figure out the human she wants to be-- not defined by her partner or friends-- but herself. The only way out is through. Literally and figuratively. This is a time loop novel that knows it is a time loop novel but also wants to be itself. It achieves that at every turn of the page. 

II need to start with a few things here. First, I have not officially reviewed a RH book since her debut because horror reviewers were hard enough to find at Booklist and LJ and RH was an author librarian reviewers loved to be assigned. I allowed others -- who I knew would do her books justice-- to get the titles they wanted while I focused on others. But, second, as I did a few stops on our books tours together last fall and RH was talking about this novel-- in revisions at that time-- I was like wait, what? I am a sucker for a Time Loop story always. So literally 9 months ago I told my editor at Booklist that I HAD to review this one. I will step back next time for someone else.

And I am glad I did. 


The premise is in the summary. It is a wedding time loop. Willa is our MC and narrator. She is the one stuck in the time loop, but this is not a time loop like you ever read before. When I got to the second loop-- well that is when I knew this book was going to be 5 stars.


I do not want to give much away here but what she does with the time loop itself if darkly humorous, touching, disturbing, unsettling, and also, the resolution is great. It is a true resolution from a SF background and I loved that. Also the way the loop alters each time is AMAZING. It adds urgency, thought provoking seriousness and dark humor to it all.


And the connection to how she starts to get info on how to leave the loop-- perfection!


This is not a "rom-com" time loop either. This is Willa's story. She is a mess of anxiety and depression and not just because she chose to end her own wedding a few months before this book opens. And not just because she is going to see her ex. She has always been that way and she has always felt bad about being too much for others or that her feelings weren't validated. Her first action to make her own story and live as her authentic self came when she broke off her engagement but the test to how she would go through it all to get to the other side--- that is this book.

Time Loop stories are also character centered always and that is why I love them. When the "plot" repeats over and over, the reason you read is the characters. But also, the new twist RH adds to the entire Time Loop subgenre here means that the plot is different in key ways each time. This allows Willa to grow as a character and flesh out for us, but it also allows the other main players to be fleshed out. She spends more time with different people each time and that makes the entire book better.

Because this is a time loop novel, and because RH does follow the outline of the subgenre even while making key changes to make it her own, readers know the loop will end. But one of the best things about this novel is that the thing that caused her to be in the time loop-- well it has a history itself and she stops her loop but the reader is left with the lingering knowledge that it has harmed others in the past and the fear that it will do so again. LOVED THAT.

Readalikes: Yes this is for people who like time loop horror like The Gone World by Sweterlitsch and The Shining Girls by Beukes and even time loop adjacent novels like Dark Matter by Crouch, but this book is HORROR (with those capitals) that seeks to honor the traditions of the genre while also making it something new. It investigates the genre itself.  For that reason, my main readalikes are Lucky Day by Tingle and I Was a Teenaged Slasher by SGJ. 

STAR 
Off the Reservation
Stephen Graham Jones
Oct. 2026. 416p. Saga, $32  (9781668225127)
First published July 2026 (Booklist).


When digging into the darkest corners of history, no one is spared from the monsters unearthed. Set five years after the action of The Only Good Indians, Jones’ companion novel begins with one of its only survivors, Nate Yellow Tail, severely injured after robbing the home of a wealthy “Summer Indian.” While in the hospital, Nurse Seine recruits Nate to join a rag-tag group of Indians, herself, a mute young man dressed like a priest, and the RV owner, actively grieving the death of her husband and sons, on a quest from their Montana reservation to Pennsylvania’s infamous Carlisle Indian School to repatriate the bones of a murdered Blackfeet boy. However, gathering the bones is only half the story, as something evil is determined to follow them home, unless Nate can make his own last stand. A hilarious road trip novel, a fresh, non-religious take on the possession trope, a visceral and vulnerable character study, laying bare a 360 degree view of the horrors of being Native in America. More than the sum of its perfectly constructed parts, this is a horror novel where every detail works together, deepening the emotional impact for all. For fans of Iglesias’ The Devil Takes You Home and the possession trope as reimagined by Cordova in Monstrilio.
Three Words That Describe This Book: immersive, non-Christian possession, visceral/venerable/hilarious

Further AppelL More words-- Every detail matters, immersive, character centered, road trip horror, revenge horror, horror of historical racism especially as inflicted upon the marginalized people, intense dread from start that literally bursts open, possession trope reimagined, nuanced characters, exorcism of racism, intense, uneasy.

First thing first, this is a companion novel to The Only Good Indians. It is only a sequel in that it comes 5 years after the action of the first. (TOGI is 2011 and this is 2016) There are multiple povs here but our main narrator is Nate Yellow Tail-- the only survivor of the massacre at the sweat lodge in TOGI and also the on and off again boyfriend of D, the basketball player and (in my opinion) the young woman who carries the hope fort he further at the end of TOGI.

You can read these in any order though. Seriously. Each will inform the other.

And  one of the threads here is what makes a "Good Indian" maybe even more so than in TOGI as multiple characters struggle with this-- or maybe don't but should in the case of one very sure of himself PhD holding Indian. 

Okay let's get to this book. Just like SGJ took the Vampire trope by the horns and made it something totally new with The Buffalo Hunter Hunter, a great horror novel, but also a thoughtful deep dive into the horror that is being Native in America, here he does both by taking the possession trope on a roadtrip (literally and figuratively). It is one of the most terrifying, violent, and visceral road trips ever, but it is also tender, vulnerable, and honestly, hilarious.

Like all of his novels, there is a lot of vengeance here, but the revenge is not just the Natives against an America that has caused them so much ruin (so many examples here like always) but also there is a lot of revenge here against each other in so many nuanced and varied ways. It is about how humans hurt each other, but also how many still seek to do as much good as they are capable of.

The character building drives this story. The POV is spread around so as readers we know the characters from themselves and others. It enhances the story. Especially because most of the action is inside an RV. There are 4 Indians on this road trip. Nate a high schooler, Nurse Seine (Plenty Wolf) who springs him out of the hospital (about 60), Christian-- a young man, seemingly mute, dressed as a priest, and Mooch, clearly younger than Plenty Wolf but with all white hair-- it turned white after she lost all three of her sons and her husband (not at once, but the story of their deaths is shared and for her husband and one son in particular, those stories are key to the novel).

Let me back up, Nate is in the hospital AGAIN (because he was after TOGI) because he and a friend break into a "Summer Indian's" reservation luxury home, they destroy it, steal a few things -- but when returning to the car, it is hit by a gravel truck. The friend is on life support and Nate is trying to recover. But while this is an "inciting incident" to start the novel and it does come into play later -- as there are a few key twists in the second half here after they get the bones...see next paragraph.

So what is the roadtrip for-- well they are driving to the infamous Carlisle Indian Industrial School, to grab the bones of a Native young boy who was murdered there and repatriate them home. Why they are each on this quest is part of the story. But they get the bones in the middle of the novel and that is when the book goes from a road-trip novel to a possession horror story, but they are also still on a road trip back.

I love SGJ's writing because every single detail matters. He crafts these interesting and engaging characters-- and the 4 Indians in this RV might be some of the best ever-- provides a lot of details about them, I don't want to give them away, but one example the motorbike caught mid air and impaled into the RV's rear as a tribute to one character's dead son, that alone and the details around it ALL END UP MATTERING. That's a big thing, but it is but one example of many.

The 1988 movie WAR PARTY is also key here. You will want to look it up, find a copy, get lost in the problematic nature of it,  but also, see the love/pride the characters have for it. Again it is nuanced and complicated. I hope this book allows more people to see and discuss the movie. 

The Little Bighorn monument is key as well. As is the 2016 Standing Rock protests of the Dakota Pipeline protests. And very key-- 2016 is the year after the inflatable dinosaur costumes came into our world-- Not going to share more than that but note above when I said there was hilarity here. Not dark humor, hilarity. 

This book is more than the sum of its parts. There is an ongoing nuanced description of what it means to be a "good Indian" but it is all wrapped up in a perfectly executed roadtrip/possession/revenge horror novel. The horror is not sacrificed for the serious discussion of the legacy of oppression on the oppressed people and in their interactions with each other.

It is Nate Yellow Tail's Last Stand-- pun intended.

A hilarious road trip horror story, a bold new, non-Christian take on the possession novel, a Visceral and vulnerable character driven story. with a  360 degree view of the horrors of oppression visible as they drive across the upper plains of American.

I have written many words here, but I have given NOTHING away. 

Did I mention....every detail matters? I cannot stress enough, this is what is best about SGJ's writing. He throws a lot at the reader, sometimes, it seems like it is there just to stand out and for no reason, but NO, as a reader, you know and trust ever detail will some into play-- Nate's pee shyness is a great example.

For fans of road trip horror in the vein of The Devil Takes you Home by Iglesias (linked and mentioned above), Razorblade Tears by Cosby, or When the Wolf Comes Home by Cassidy, and the possession trope as reimagined and explored by Cordova in Monstrilio (mentioned above and also mentioned by SGJ in his acknowledgments)-- not based on the Christian devil and exorcism rules, although cleverly one character is named Christian, carries a bible, and dresses like priest (and the reason is amazing and heart breaking when you find out the full story).


Book cover for We Turn Gruesome at Night by Eric LaRocca. Click on the image for more info.STAR
We Turn Gruesome At Night
Burnt Sparrow Book 2
By Eric LaRocca

Ten years after the events of We Are Always Tender With Our Dead readers return to the blighted, rotten town of Burnt Sparrow, NH. Rupert and Gladys are still trapped within the walls of End House, unable to even poke a finger over the threshold without their skin unraveling. The claustrophobia and anxiety are already intense, when one day their regular grocery delivery comes with an anonymous confession letter addressed to Rupert. The details of that letter are shocking, but they also provide the spark that blows the story wide open, allowing Rupert and Gladys the chance to taste freedom. However, once they cross this threshold, they can never go back to the way things were and the horror of this both discomfiting and titillating. LaRocca holds readers rapt, engrossing them in a tale of layered depravities, confident they will be unable to look away. An exemplary middle book of a trilogy; a strong stand-alone story that plants the seed of the finale to come; a tale that honors the history of the Gothic but gives it new life by injecting it with the alluring catharsis of transgressive horror; for fans of Shirley Jackson, Clive Barker, and Poppy Z. Brite.

Three Words That Describe This Book: crossing thresholds, extreme horror meets Gothic, engrossing

Further Appeal: Other words: claustrophobic, epic, immersive, disturbing and yet, you cannot look away. Great use of stories within stories.

When you read this book, terrible things are happening. They begin bad-- Rupert and Gladys have been trapped in End House for 10 years since readers last saw them. Burst Sparrow is still a rotted, blighted, horrible place, a place that stands in opposition to all living things that wish to grow and flourish. A place where hopelessness has rooted itself like cancer. Readers come back and hope things will get better.
Well, again, listen to LaRocca with the book’s trigger warnings-- it won't get better and in fact it will get worse in ways you cannot comprehend. But also, you will be UNABLE to look away. 

The claustrophobia of the story-- the two of them trapped in the house-- and we see what happens multiple times if you try to leave, it is not in their heads-- is building in a way that we readers know it is about to burst. I mean it has been 10 monotonous years. There is a temporary solution to their predicament that is figured out, but this is the story we are reading. 

Regarding Crossing thresholds: There is a point in this book where Rupert mentions that the stories his mom told him are all about crossing thresholds and well--- that is this book as well-- literally and figuratively-- both the plot but also, this is book 2 in a trilogy. The job of the middle book in a trilogy is to build a bridge from book one to three, it is the book that allows readers to cross the threshold from the story they got sucked into and takes the far enough along that they are craving the third book. Many second books in trilogies fall flat because they have to be a good story on their own and do this heavy lifting-- carrying the reader. Here we get a fascinating story by an author who understands the work that has to be done.

This story allows Rupert and Gladys and their impossible situation to cross a threshold, one that once they cross, they cannot go back. It also allows the story to cross a threshold to move us all toward book 3. Well done.

The use of stories with the story-- this time mostly through confessional letters that Rupert receives as part of the secretive Perdido Society-- those letters create both a standalone story and service to move the plot forward. LaRocca does this frequently in his work and it is always engrossing but here it is particularly useful to the plot.

LaRocca's writing never ceases to amaze me. Every single time I read anything they write I go through the gamut of emotions-- intrigued and illicit things, disgusted, revulsion, sympathy, anger, sadness, rejoicing at things I probably shouldn't rejoice at. And the entire time, no matter how uncomfortable the writing makes me feel, I keep turning the pages. And when I look up, I blink and literally notice how many dozens of pages have flown by. Where did they go? How long was I held rapt by the storytelling? The pages literally melt away. And I remember everything I read. The images, the characters, the details that he plants and comes back to. It is quite remarkable. 

I am waiting for this NOT to happen. If it ever does, he will get less than 5 stars. It has not happened yet. LaRocca draws readers into this dark, blighted, sickening world and like Rupert and Gladys, you cannot leave. But unlike them, you really don't want to. 

Plants the seeds for book three-- this word choice is intentional. Not a spoiler but when you read this book you will understand that word choice.

I have shared VERY little about what happens here, but trust me, you want to read it. Also don't worry about re-reading the first Burnt Sparrow book. The major points you need to remember-- LaRocca shares. Now if you never read the first book, you might be a little lost, but if you read the back cover of book 1 and know that there was the massacre-- that is enough to ground you and LaRocca fills in enough of the blanks. But I will say, the Brunt Sparrow trilogy is many to be one book released in three parts, so go back and read We Are Always Tender With Our Dead.

Also can I just say, I know Eric has great titles for his books but this one is particularly perfect for this book. Again, no spoilers, but *chef's kiss*

Further Readalikes: You can check all of my reviews of LaRocca in the past to see more, but I gave you three authors to start with.